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Morcheeba discuss the journey to Dive Deep

Feature by Jack Foley

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DIVE Deep is the sixth album from Morcheeba and it’s perhaps their most surprising.

On their first five albums they explored the gamut of contemporary alt.dance genres, pioneering a song-based form of dance music that would soon become known as trip hop or chill-out that was notable for featuring the serene vocals of singer, Skye Edwards. There were other collaborations, but Morcheeba was virtually synonymous with Skye.

By 2005’s The Antidote, however, brothers Paul and Ross Godfrey had split with Skye and employed Daisy Martey to step into the breach. It prompted many to speculate whether they would have a very long future. But, in truth, the Godfreys were at the early stage of redefining what they were about.

By 2008, Morcheeba had become a vehicle for the thoughts and experiments of the brothers that was revealed via a series of vocalists who could enhance the atmosphere of fluidity and free-form exploration rather than any one fixed singer.

“A lot of them I contacted through MySpace,” explains Paul, “and they were all people who wanted to genuinely contribute something. This made the whole process extremely easy. The songs were mainly co-written with the guests spontaneously in the studio. I had an emotional template for the album and they picked it up and ran with it.”

These guests range from established names such as acclaimed singer-songwriter Judie Tzuke, who Paul grew up listening to and has, he says, “a natural sense of melody – her voice is unique and extremely soulful”, to relative newcomers such as Thomas Dybdahl, a star in his homeland of Norway (“I was gob-smacked – again, his voice was so soulful”), rapper Cool Calm Pete (“his rap was heartfelt without being slushy and his delivery is one of the best I have ever heard”), Bradley Burgess (a friend from Folkestone with whom Paul bonded over a love of John Martyn) and Manda, a French singer who contacted the Godfreys via MySpace, admitting “it was her dream to sing with us.”

But what of that “emotional template”? Dive Deep is, by the Godfreys’ own admission, a labour of love and a project that has rescued a band in danger of being derailed. It has also restored the brothers’ faith in music.

“For me this album is already a success,” says Paul. “When I was listening to it come together I listened with my whole body. I could feel it bubble up from my calves through my gut and my chest and burst into ideas and moods that we could channel. “It turned out to be the depression-beating therapy I really needed and I am so proud,” he adds, taking the opportunity to reflect on the intense period that led to the creation of Dive Deep.

“It was great to have sold millions of records and toured the world but we were nervously exhausted and our working relationships deteriorated very quickly,” he says. “After our fourth album Charango we weren’t even on speaking terms and the tension on tour was making us all sick so Ross and I decided to part with Skye [singer on the first four Morcheeba albums].”

The Godfreys drafted in another singer for fifth album The Antidote but that merely confirmed what they already suspected: that they “no longer wanted to share any power with a permanent singer”, so again they parted company.

“The tour to promote The Antidote was difficult to say the least. It left us in near-ruin.”

Paul, who believes he was “at my unhappiest when Morcheeba were at their most successful”, admits he “didn’t realise making sweet music could be such a sour business”.

Eventually, Ross decided to move to LA. As for Paul, pressures of work and the death of his father had a rather more negative effect.

“I took to my bed with major depression: I’ve suffered on and off with depression since I was a teenager but this time it didn’t feel as if I would ever shake it. I had everything I’d ever wanted and still I felt as if it was all meaningless. We had conquered nearly every continent and worked with our heroes and it just wasn’t enough. I have a beautiful family and I was driving them insane. I was brought to my knees. So I decided to pour all these feelings into a new album.”

The brothers agreed that Paul would produce the new album, just as well considering the amount of manic energy he now had to expend as he emerged from his slough of despond.

“It was like being 20 again. I slept on the studio floor for two years only eating takeaways and working 16-hour days. I must have nearly killed the young engineer [Paul Jones] I was working with because my energy was so intense. “Of course, I realised very early on that it was great to have control of the vision but I needed Ross and some great collaborators to bring it together.”

Hence, the search on the internet for those guest vocalists and the resulting album of collaborative electronic folk and blues, Dive Deep, with its title evocative of a band immersing themselves in oceanic sound to ease their pain.

“It felt great to put the past to rest and it was refreshing that nobody placed any expectations on us,” says Paul. “We were free again to dive deep within and bring the music out naturally. We had done our fair share of trying to be fashionable and emulating other stuff and now we were confident enough to be ourselves.

“There are metaphors on the album for the womb: I always liked the sounds underwater and that’s one of the things I aspire to in producing – that warm and textured sound. There’s also a sense of swimming our way out of trouble, diving down to release a lot of past pain and anger. As it came to the surface it brought a lot of creativity with it. It’s hard to be an artist, trying to reinvent the wheel, but this felt very urgent and emotional.”

“This is the first record we’ve made where we weren’t looking at our contemporaries and wondering what’s going on, where we just made the record we wanted to make,” Ross continues. “We used an incredible amount of new technology for this album, but it’s all new-old stuff – ancient keyboards, like claviolines. It’s all very organic. The technology came into play in the way that we edited it and put it together.”

Ross insists that, despite the backstory to the album and the feelings of despair that propelled it into being, Dive Deep is not an uncomfortable listen. Quite the opposite, he says.

“It’ s a joy to listen to; a triumphant record. The process of catharsis enabled us to be very creative. The feeling is really summed up by the track Washed Away, where by the chorus all the negative stuff seems to get washed away like so many droplets of doubt.”